首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Sex and a snail's sperm: on the transport,storage and fate of dimorphic sperm in Littorinidae
Authors:JOHN BUCKLAND-NICKS  IAN BRYSON  LESLIE HART  VANESSA PARTRIDGE
Affiliation:St. Francis Xavier University , PO Box 5000, Antigonish, Nova Scotia, B2G 2W5, Canada Phone: +1 (902) 867-2259 Fax: +1 (902) 867-2259 E-mail: jbucklan@stfx.ca
Abstract:Summary

Littorinid parasperm develop from a distinctive lineage of germ cells which exhibit a process of nuclear destruction that has apototic characteristics. Fragments of DNA and other nuclear breakdown products are incorporated into secretion granules in parasperm that ultimately find their way to the female bursa copulatrix. Spermatozeugmata are stored in the seminal vesicles and, if unused during the breeding season, they are recycled by phagocytosis. Attachment between eusperm and parasperm is facilitated by an electrostatic interaction of proteins. Detachment, caused by alkaline prostate fluid, occurs by the time the ejaculate reaches the tip of the penis. Thus transport of eusperm by parasperm to the female is unlikely. parasperm are sterile cells that may function in defense against rival eusperm as suggested by the presence of lysosomes, or they may act as nuptial gifts as they are packed with glycoprotein nutrients. Differences in the reactivity of different parasperm to specific lectins may enable separation of dimorphic sperm by lectin affinity chromatography, thereby facilitating future studies on individual parasperm. In female Littorinidae, sperm are stored incapacitated in storage organs, or rarely in the ovary itself. In L. littorea serotonin caused spawning of unencapsulated eggs, which, in the presence of activated sperm, became polyspermic.
Keywords:Sperm dimorphism  parasperm  apoptosis  lectins  sperm capacitation  fertilization  Gastropoda  Mollusca
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号